Plot twist: it’s a small farm town in the 1980s and the waiter brings you a damn beer like you deserve
DEAD ACCOUNT. Lemmy.one does not have active administration and I need to move on. Catch me over at dbzer0: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/u/empireOfLove2
Yet another Reddit refugee from the great 3rd party app purge of 2023. Obligatory fuck /u/Spez.
Plot twist: it’s a small farm town in the 1980s and the waiter brings you a damn beer like you deserve
that brownie has a 1000% chance of being the strongest concentration of edible THC you’ve ever felt in your goddamn life
Coming soon: 5000 spam copes of the same relabelled, stolen mods by every single scammer in existence
Damn guess I’ll just never buy it till the inevitable port then.
Oh yeah that’s a good idea too. Sure any one client device will be limited to 1g but your NAS could use a super cheap multi-port ethernet card to get 2 or 4g bonded link speeds so it can serve multiple devices at full speed.
Yup. Same age, same design, same failures… and array rebuilds are super intense workloads that often force a lot of random reads and run the drive at 100% load for many hours.
Yeah. They got sold once around 1996 and then again to Hasbro in 1998 after they were failing IIRC. So they were kind of an amalgamation of a bunch of different companies
And Roller Coaster Tycoon! (although it was technically under Hasbro at that point)
2.5 is still really new in the networking space and nobody has hit economies of scale yet. I very much also want to build out my home LAN to be entirely 2.5g compatible since 1g is limiting for my NAS use case (video storage), 10g is overkill and not supported by my client devices, and I only need 16/24 ports. but good God the hardware just isn’t reasonable yet.
You pretty much have to bite the bullet if you really want 2.5 right now. What might honestly be worthwhile is finding a used enterprise 1g switch with the number of ports you need, and will still be “enough”, as those can be had for only a couple hundred dollars. Sit on that for 2-3 years until the 2.5g and 5g hardware market starts to fill out and you can decide how badly you need 2.5g then
Really. Anything branded from Samsung or Crucial(Micron) is going to be fine. They are the top producers of NAND, produce high quality products, and stand behind warranties. But you are gonna pay out the nose for the privilege of enterprise grade hardware.
You might just be buying lower quality consumer SSD’s though, since even they should be able to handle a surprising amount of abuse.
If I had a dollar for every time rebuilding a RAID array after one failed drive caused a second drive failure in the array in less than 24 hours… I’d probably buy groceries for a week.
Plot twist: there are no biters, the planet just spits lava at you
Im not OP, but I’m 95% sure those commands are specific to the midjourney discord bot. I don’t know if Bing passes command args like the discord bot does or if it just ignores them. Worth doing some experimentation though
–ar = aspect ratio
16:9 defines said aspect ratio of width:height (16:9 is standard computer monitor widescreen)
–s is “stylize” which controls the realism passes.
A lower value gives realistic images while higher values generates more cartoons, outlandish, “trippy” kinda images (75 is a very low value)
…I thought you just said you’re running OwnCloud?
Jpg at 70% will lose a significant amount of detail. It is a “lossy” format, you cant judt compress data for nothing.
AVIF is significantly more efficient than jpeg, so it loses less image data for higher compression (smaller file sizes).
JXL supports both lossy and lossless compression, and is supposed to be more efficient yet over AVIF. However it’s got proprietary all over it because Google et al. For thst alone I would shy away from JXL and go AVIF.
I second RustDesk, I’ve started using it a lot lately and it works quite well even across the internet and NAT. Works best if you have your own server that you can use as a relay rather than direct connection or using RustDesk’s own limited public servers, but even without it, it gets the job done.
Maybe it’s both…